Biden's Innate Racism
By: John Semmens
Fifty Senate Republicans and two Democrats blocked President Biden's bill to federalize all elections in order to mandate changes that will make vote fraud easier—by eliminating photo ID requirements, legalizing ballot harvesting, increasing the quantity of mail-in ballots, and blocking regular purges of deceased, moved, and inactive voters from the rolls. There is no question that the “reforms” the Democrats want will increase the number of ballots that will be counted.
The Democrats' animosity to trying to ensure that only legal votes are counted contradicts polls showing that nearly 80% of black voters favor ID verification before accepting a ballot for counting. Nevertheless, Biden has likened opponents of his legislation to Jefferson Davis, Bull Connor, and George Wallace. The irony is that all these notable racists were Democrats—a fact that Biden dismissed “as just as irrelevant as the fact that more Democrats than Republicans voted against the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Neither is it important that a majority of Blacks favor voter ID. As our decades long in loco parentis role for the Black community has demonstrated, they get more if we do their thinking for them.”
“For example, under my directive the FDA is giving preference to Blacks over whites when it comes to receiving treatment with our limited supply of anti-covid drugs,” the President bragged. “Technically, this isn't legal. And many admirers of Dr. Martin Luther King would say that it goes against his hope that people would be judged by their character and not by the color of their skin. Noble as this aspiration is it wastes the opportunity to use power to achieve results that cannot be attained through mere good character or hard work. Our voting rights bill would ensure that the Democratic Party stays in power so it can get Blacks the payback we think they deserve. Isn't that a better deal for the Black man than blind justice?”
In related news, this week President Biden declared that “George Floyd's death had a bigger impact on America than the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. The rioting after Dr. King died was less sustained and fruitful than the rioting sparked by Floyd's death in police custody. The Floyd riots led to significant reductions in funding of police departments around the country. It also generated a movement to place the blame for crime where it really belongs—the people who have more than they deserve. I believe if we can adopt the kind of social credit system and the monitoring of everyone, everywhere, and anytime the government will have a mechanism for redistributing wealth from the undeserving to the victims we have callously been calling criminals for so long.”